Coming from a state champion baker:

leaper182:

meowjorie:

docholligay:

If y’all use a decent box mix and use melted butter instead of vegetable oil, an extra egg, and milk instead of water, no one can tell the difference. I sure as hell can’t. 

Also, if you add a little almond extract to vanilla cake, or a little coffee to chocolate cake, it sends it through the roof. 

This concludes me attempting to be helpful. 

yo I can vouch for this
I’ve done this for the last few cakes I’ve made and holy crap it makes suuuuch a difference
the cake is still fluffy, but it also seems more dense, and it doesn’t dry out
like at all
you can leave it uncovered on the counter all day after being cut into, and it won’t get all crusty and dry
this is an amazing way to take your cakes to the next level

Does this count as cake hacks?

reachingforthestardust:

so i’ve seen a lot of posts talking about sam watching rhodey fall like it was riley all over again

disclaimer: i completely agree.

now: let’s talk about how Sam is helping Steve get back his best friend, his Bucky. How Bucky survived the fall and is still out there, living, alive.

let’s talk about Sam plunging as fast as he can to save Rhodey, seeing Rhodey survive. Rhodey surviving the fall, is still living, alive.

let’s talk about Riley, falling to the ground, not getting up, not breathing. let’s talk about Sam watching him fall, helpless to stop it.

let’s talk about how everyone else’s best friend survives, but not riley, and how sam sees everyone else survive – but not riley.

let’s talk about that.

Creative control

agentfreewill:

Who owns art? 

Certainly the artist has some integral claim, and might reasonably want to make sure that other people don’t get credit for or profit from their work.  Plagiarism is roundly condemned.  A tumblr example is posting someone else’s photo or art without crediting them; most especially if you’ve lifted it unedited from the original artist’s own post.  You would then be garnering likes and reblogs that by rights “belong” to the artist who made the work, you are stealing attention and reputation from them.

But then; who owns REACTION to art?

If a story, a film, a picture, a poem, a statue, a song moves the person experiencing it SO MUCH that they are in turn inspired to be creative in response – that would seem the highest praise one could give.  Do they re-crop and re-tint a photo?  Write a story with the same characters / in the same world? Draw their own picture?  If your art stirs the imagination in others and births more art, how are we anything but enriched?

The problem is when people want to control the reaction to art.  Whether it is the original artist themselves, or the company making money from the art, when people are told that they are responding wrong, stop, behave the way I want you do then things get problematic.

When it’s men telling women (again, here as well) that their reactions and desires are less important, less valuable, less respected than what men want and do.

When it’s an author hoarding her characters like a dragon, spitting fire at anyone who wants to imagine them differently.

When it’s music studios that shut down remixed songs so that no-one gets any money from anything their artists did but them.

When we stifle creative reactions to art, we are stifling art.

Because the fan that writes those stories using characters and a universe established by other authors?  Those are original works too.  Those are stories that can be plagiarized.  Those are stories that can be criticized for having the “wrong content”.  Those are stories that can have their own fans, who may in turn make more art in response.

If you want to say that “fan” art is somehow less valuable than “real” art I ask you – what is your criteria for “real” art?  If it in any way boils down to “art that makes someone money” then you are not valuing art, you are valuing capitalism. If it is “original only” then I invite you to find me any art that does not in some way borrow elements from predecessors.  If it is (even if you can’t admit it) “art created and/or controlled by men in some way”, well, you can see yourself right out. 

When we stifle creative reactions to art, we are stifling art.

Fan art is art.